SYNOPSIS

DESCRIPTION

Certain applications like to defer the decision to use a particular module till runtime. This is possible in perl, and is a useful trick in situations where the type of data is not known at compile time and the application doesn't wish to pre-compile modules to handle all types of data it can work with. Loading modules at runtime can also provide flexible interfaces for perl modules. Modules can let the programmer decide what modules will be used by it instead of hard-coding their names.

Class::Loader is an inheritable class that provides a method, _load(), to load a module from disk and construct an object by calling its constructor. It also provides a way to map modules names and associated metadata with symbolic names that can be used in place of module names at _load().

METHODS

new()

A basic constructor. You can use this to create an object of Class::Loader, in case you don't want to inherit Class::Loader.

_load()

_load() loads a module and calls its constructor. It returns the newly constructed object on success or a non-true value on failure. The first argument can be the name of the key in which the returned object is stored. This argument is optional. The second (or the first) argument is a hash which can take the following keys:

Module

This is name of the class to load. (It is not the module's filename.)

Name

Symbolic name of the module defined with _storemap(). Either one of Module or Name keys must be present in a call to _load().

Constructor

Name of the Module constructor. Defaults to "new".

Args

A reference to the list of arguments for the constructor. _load() calls the constructor with this list. If no Args are present, _load() will call the constructor without any arguments.

CPAN

If the Module is not installed on the local system, _load() can fetch & install it from CPAN provided the CPAN key is present. This functionality assumes availability of a pre-configured CPAN shell.

_storemap()

Class::Loader maintains a class table that maps symbolic names to parameters accepted by _load(). It takes a hash as argument whose keys are symbolic names and value are hash references that contain a set of _load() arguments. Here's an example: